Monday, May 24, 2010

Awesome U2 "With Or Without You" Cover on Joost

<a href="http://www.joost.com/3701uu35">We Are The Fallen: Mashup Mondays</a>

Friday, May 21, 2010

Sneak Peek: 'Inception'

Wow this looks awesome...

<a href="http://www.joost.com/3ah1uswb">Sneak Peek: Inception</a>

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Monday, May 10, 2010

Open Source Government In San Fran?

It was only a matter of time, but San Francisco has opened up it's information pipeline in a more accessible fashion to the fine residents of this city. For people in the ad biz, 'open source' is not a new term. A former client of mine is an open source platform for creatives. An advertiser can submit a proposal to an online community (a similar user interface to Facebook), and people from all over can collaborate to submit a project to the advertiser. A director from LA could find a guy with a green screen in Burbank, while their graphic designer for the new logo is in San Fran.

Wikipedia defines open source as "the creative practice of appropriation and free sharing of found and created content."

Long story short, the idea has come to the business of running SF....

courtesy Fast Company

It's a good thing Gavin Newsom checks his Twitter feed during meetings. Otherwise, San Francisco's mayor would've missed a life-changing missive about ... potholes? "It really made me wonder," he says. "What if we used social media to make our city services work better?" That stray tweet led to the city's first-of-its-kind Twitter account (@SF311), which encourages residents to send queries and messages about nonemergency issues. But it also underscores the city's open-source stance on government. Just as Google, Facebook, and Twitter released their programming interfaces to app makers, San Francisco opened its arsenal of public information -- train times, crime stats, health-code scores -- to software developers. "There's a tremendous amount of tech talent here," Newsom says. "We'd be fools not to leverage it." To date, more than 140 data sets have been liberated, spawning roughly 30 smartphone apps, such as Crimespotting (browse interactive city-crime maps), Routesy (see real-time train schedules), and EcoFinder (locate the nearest recycling spots). But San Francisco's open-source stance doesn't stop at the city limits: In February, it launched an idea-sharing site, which blueprints everything from citywide health insurance to banning plastic bags. And in March, it released the API for its 311 city-service center. Boston; Los Angeles; Portland, Oregon; Seattle; and Washington, D.C., have already pledged to adopt the new standard.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

iPhone 4 Firmware Reveals File-Sharing, Orientation Lock, and How to Close Multitasking Apps


The rumor mill continues....

Apple's just released the latest developer firmware before the official iPhone 4.0 roll-out. This is geeky. What is not geeky is some of the secrets it reveals about the future iPhone workings. Apple seems to have utterly nailed it.

File sharing direct to iPhone

This is an oft-requested feature by the more traditionally minded iPhone user, used to managing files in folders on desktops rather than the iPhone OS's hidden file management layer, but it's going to be damn useful all the same: Apple's enabling direct user-manageable file transfer between your computer and your iPhone (and later, presumably, your iPad). It's a question of syncing the two devices, then clicking through to the Apps tab in the iPhone and scrolling down to the "Files" section, from where you can drag and drop stuff to and from your main computer. As the name suggests, Apple's keeping a certain degree of control over this, and you can't just dump files of any type willy-nilly--it's app driven. For now it looks like only Mail is enabled, but it's certain that other apps, like Pages and whatnot, will get this power by the time the OS officially rolls out.

Orientation lock and widgets

The iPad's physical-switch orientation lock is handy for those reading-an-ebook-in-bed moments when the device's gyros might otherwise detect your reading position incorrectly. It too is a feature oft-requested for the iPhone, but it looks like it won't be replicated in hardware for the iPhone 2010--it's appeared as part of iPhone 4.0's multitasking pop-up panel as a virtual button. Hence, for users prone to using their iPhone when...erm...prone, a quick double-tap of the home button then a left-swipe will bring up the menu, then it's just a question of clicking the icon.

Apple's engineers have obviously decided that this new menu has some useful functionality, though, and have viewed it as a mini widget portal, of sorts, because there's also now a quick-access button to get to the iPod app (previously accessible by a double click of home in earlier iPhone OSs) as well as very basic iPod controls.

Closing Apps

Introducing multitasking also introduces the issue of users managing which apps are running (though iPhone 4 does a pretty good job of this automatically). That means letting users close active apps from the multitasking menu. Apple's just tweaked this, not a lot, but in a way that makes it super easy to do: It's now just like the old "delete app" function, where you hold your finger down over an app's icon. The OS then enters a "close app" mode, which lets you shut down as many sequentially as you like.

iPhone 2010 summary

iPhone 4

So with this news, the earlier iPhone 4.0 data, and information gleaned by Gizmodo from the leaked iPhone 2010 prototype, what can we work out about this year's new iPhone experience? A lot. Here's a guesstimated specs list:

* Size: Similar to iPhone 3GS, just squarer and a tiny bit shallower
* Weight: Similar to iPhone 3GS
* Battery life: Possibly up to 20% more for all functions, dependent on software power management
* Screen: High res, possibly 940 by 640 pixels (four times as many as before)
* Camera: Front facing, possibly VGA (may be higher though.) Read facing, 5 megapixels, with flash
* Multitasking: Check
* Direct file transfers: Check
* Screen orientation lock: Check
* Direct wireless printing: Probably
* Proper support for Bluetooth keyboard in iPhone: Possibly (to support iPhone iWork apps.)
* ARM-based 1GHz CPU: Very likely

Add those together and you have a smartphone positioned to challenge the growing army of Android phones, but coming with the provenance of the iPhone's history, lots of Apple chic, and hundreds of thousands of existing apps. iPhone 2010 with iPhone 4.0 aboard is going to be, let's face it, the bees knees...and since many of these powers will also be available on older iPhones too, when their firmware is updated, it's a bit of a win-win for iPhone fans.